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Russia stops rocket engine sales to United States

The decades-old space partnership between Russia and the West may be going up in smoke, another victim of the invasion of Ukraine.  

Early Thursday morning (March 3), London-based company OneWeb announced that it's suspending launches of its satellites from the Russia-run Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. 

The decision came after Russia's federal space agency, Roscosmos, announced it would not launch 36 OneWeb internet satellites as planned on Friday (March 4) unless OneWeb guaranteed that the craft would not be used for military purposes and the United Kingdom government agreed to divest itself from OneWeb, which it helped buy out of bankruptcy in 2020

Roscosmos has also halted launches of Russian-built Soyuz rockets from Europe's Spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana. And Roscosmos chief Dimitry Rogozin announced Friday that his agency will no longer sell rocket engines to United States companies, saying, "Let them fly on something else, their broomsticks." (The ban likely won't have a far-reaching impact, perhaps substantially affecting only Northrop Grumman, which uses Russian-made RD-181 engines in its Antares rocket. RD-180s power the first stage of United Launch Alliance's workhorse Atlas V launcher, but the company says it has enough of the engines on hand to fly out all remaining Atlas V missions.)

RD-180 ENGINE

Rogozin has also called into question Russia's participation in the International Space Station program, which has long been held up as a symbol of cooperation through trying times here on Earth. 

Shortly after Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24, U.S. President Joe Biden announced the imposition of new economic sanctions that would degrade the Russian space program, among other sectors. Rogozin warned that the sanctions would have dire consequences for the orbiting lab. "Do you want to destroy our cooperation on the ISS?" the Roscosmos chief tweeted on Feb. 24.

And on Wednesday (March 2), Rogozin tweeted out a link to an interview he did with state-run broadcaster Russia Today. In the interview, Rogozin reminded viewers that Russia is responsible for space station navigation, as well as fuel deliveries to the orbiting lab.

"Therefore, we will closely monitor the actions of our American partners and, if they continue to be hostile, we will return to the question of the existence of the International Space Station," Rogozin said via a translator. "I would not like such a scenario, because I expect that the Americans will cool down."

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